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Lifting the Lions

Pittsburgh, PA: September 10, 2009 - Pittsburgh's oldest bank announced today the Phase I launch of a major restoration project and overhaul of its
historic 1871 building on Fourth Avenue, downtown Pittsburgh, beginning with the removal of its symbolic lions.

The two signature lions adorning the
original building will be removed on Saturday, September 12, for a complete restoration and replacement that is estimated to take a year to complete. The
restored lions will be returned to Pittsburgh to a to-be-determined location in midyear 2010, while the newly sculpted replacement lions will return to Fourth
Avenue in about a year. Fourth Avenue, between Smithfield Street and Wood Street, will be closed during the removal of the lions. The first lion is expected to
be moved between 8 a.m. and noon.

The lions, sculpted by Max Kohler, each from a single block of quarry-bedded brownstone, represent "guardianship of
people's money."

"The lions are a symbol for Dollar Bank's commitment to the communities we serve. They depict strength and a longstanding heritage
of service and reliability," said Robert P. Oeler, President and CEO of Dollar Bank.

A 20-ton crane will lift each 13,000-pound lion from its
Pittsburgh perch where it has rested since its original installation just after the Civil War. Over the years, the lions have withstood a number of assaults to
their integrity, including the historic 1936 Pittsburgh flood. The removal of the lions signifies the start of a compete restoration of the exterior of Dollar
Bank's Fourth Avenue building. The two brownstone lions will be removed and transported by McKay Lodge Conservation Laboratory, Inc. to its large sculpture
conservation facilities in Oberlin, Ohio.

"We believe that our Fourth Avenue building and the lions are a significant architectural treasure and we
will do all that we can to preserve them so they are around for another 150 years," Oeler said.

The fragile lions cannot just be lifted. At the end
of their historical life cycle, they are extremely fragile and risk the danger of crumbling during the removal period. Therefore, a preparation process to
ready the lions for transportation is already underway for stabilization. Each lion must be undercut to insert a lifting cradle to help transport the lions
safely to the carrying containers.

The complex project will require several interrelated steps the extent of which depends on the amount of internal
deterioration:

Removal of surface coatings and applications of new fills and any needed coating will be applied in a custom-made color to match the original stone.

The restored lions will be scanned to obtain three-dimensional digital data. This data will control a router in the cutting of high-density foam,
making patterns of the restored lions.

Lost carving detail will be restored in the foam patterns by hand work based on historic photographs so the patterns will become an accurate basis for
the carving of the stone replicas.

Dollar Bank selected McKay Lodge, Inc., a large and diverse art conservation company operating the Ohio Conservation Center, a campus of specialized buildings
near Oberlin, Ohio. In addition to being widely engaged by museums, for the past decade their sculpture department has taken care of sculpture at all federal
properties and federal courthouses throughout the United States under sole contract with the U.S. General Services Administration. In Pittsburgh, McKay Lodge
is working on the removal and conservation of Romare Bearden's mosaic mural at the Gateway Center T-station. The company is also currently engaged in
conservation projects with Pittsburgh Parks, Pittsburgh Public Art and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania through its association with the Conservation Center for
Art and Historic Artifacts in Philadelphia.

McKay Lodge's president and senior conservator, Robert G. Lodge and its senior sculpture conservator
Thomas Podnar will oversee the project. The company's associate stone and architectural conservator and the project's principal treatment conservator is Marcin
Pikus, a European-trained expert in stone, specifically sandstone consolidation. European training in stone conservation is still more advanced than it is in
the United States. Pikus received his master's degree in stone conservation from Nicholas Copernicus University in Torun, Poland where he also did his graduate
research in the kind of artificial stone mortars needed to restore the bodies of the lions. He is trained in and knowledgeable about deterioration processes of
natural stone and traditional sandstone carving. Cleaning and restoration of stone, the methods and materials of mold-making and casting solidify his expertise
for this one-of-a-kind project.

Among his notable projects, Pikus was responsible for sandstone and brick conservation for European architectural
structures such as the Polish National Bank in Gdansk, the south and east facades of the Gothic Town Hall and the Nicholas Copernicus statue in Torun, Poland.
He completed structural repairs on Philadelphia's City Hall and dozens of museums and other structures in the Midwest.

In addition to restoration of
the original lions, the project under McKay Lodge's direction will produce two new lions each of matching uniform color. The stone itself will be quarried in
China from a quarry found to have the only stone that matches the original lions after a worldwide search by stone experts. Blocks of the needed size in this
color are not available from U.S. quarries today. When complete, the two new lions will be installed at the Fourth Avenue building.

Fairplay
Stonecarvers LLC, also in Oberlin, Ohio, a custom design and restoration company that provides stone consulting, design and sculpting services, will play a key
role in the project by hand carving the two new replica lions.

Nicholas Fairplay is an architectural sculptor who specializes in hand-carved stone
and marble ornament and sculpture. He is a European-trained artisan and master carver with skill, knowledge of materials and tools, and carving finesse. A
professional member of the Stone Carver’s Guild and the Master Carvers Association in England, Fairplay has 36 years of carving experience in sandstone,
limestone and marble carving shops with tooling and techniques specific for each material. He is a very rare resource in the United States.

Fairplay
recently carved two 20-ton white Carrara marble lions for the Utah State Capitol in Salt Lake City. He also has carved work on or in the gardens of Carnegie
Mellon University, College of Fine Arts; Westminster Abbey, England; Utah Governor’s Mansion; and The Houses of Parliament, England.

Local companies,
Golon Masonry Restoration, Inc. of West Mifflin and Century Steel Erectors of Pittsburgh have been hand selected to facilitate lifting the lions. Golon Masonry
Restoration, Inc. will handle the masonry while Century Steel Erectors will manage the lifting and handling of the lions. Together the lions will be lifted,
transported and restored. The restored lions will find a new home at a to-be-determined Pittsburgh location.

About Dollar Bank With assets of $5.8 billion, Dollar Bank is the largest independent mutual bank in the United States,
employing more than 1,140 people with over 50 offices throughout southwestern Pennsylvania and northeastern Ohio. For more information, visit
www.dollarbank.com